Floorstanding Speakers

Floorstanding speakers, often called tower speakers, have been an
audiophile mainstay for decades. A floorstanding speaker is so named because
it's tall enough to sit on the floor. A floorstanding speaker cabinet is
taller than it is wide (or deep), typically standing two feet or more in
height.

Because of their large cabinets, floorstanding speakers can hold more and
larger speaker drivers. Really big floorstanding systems might have 12-inch or
15-inch diameter woofers. Some floorstanding systems contain a half-dozen or
more separate speakers.

You can find floorstanding speakers in two-way, three-way, and four-way configurations.
It used to be that three-way systems (such as the Cerwin
Vega E-715) were prevalent, but two-way systems (such as the Infinity
Primus 250) have gained popularity latelyeven though many of
these two-way systems have multiple drivers of the same size and type. (That
is, a two-way system can have more than two drivers.)

The chief benefit of a floorstanding speaker is the enhanced bass response.
Because you can fit a big woofer in that big cabinet, most floorstanding
speakers don't need a separate subwoofer to reproduce low bass frequencies.
But just because you don't need a subwoofer doesn't mean you
won't want oneand you still need a separate subwoofer for Dolby
Digital's ".1" low-frequency effects (LFE) channel. Generally
speaking, the bigger the speaker system, the more bass you'll hear. And
more bass means better reproduction for rock music and large-scale classical
music. If you're a music lover, you can't beat the sound you get from
a good pair of floorstanding speakers.

Floorstanding speakers are also more efficient than smaller systems. You get
louder sound for the same amount of power because those bigger speakers move
more air into the room. For example, you may be able to achieve the same sound
level out of large floorstanding speakers run at 75 watts/channel than you would
from smaller bookshelf speakers run at 100 watts/channel. (Or, run at the same
power level, a good set of floorstanding speaker will simply sound louder than a
set of bookshelf speakers.) This isn't always true, however, as speaker
efficiency differs significantly from model to model based on speaker
construction and design.

Big floorstanding speakers also tend to be more expensive than bookshelf
speakers, and they take up more floor space. That room-filling sound comes at a
pricein terms of both money and square inches! But some of that purchase
price goes toward the fancy wood cabinet. The best floorstanding speakers are
high-quality furniture, and make a design statement in any room.